Lakeside Murder Case

Lakeside Murder Case (レイクサイド マーダーケース, Reikusaido mādā kēsu) is a 2004 Japanese mystery film directed by Shinji Aoyama, starring Kōji Yakusho, Hiroko Yakushimaru and Etsushi Toyokawa.

Lakeside Murder Case
Directed byShinji Aoyama
Written byShinji Aoyama
Masaki Fukasawa
Based onLakeside
by Keigo Higashino
Produced byTakenori Sento
StarringKōji Yakusho
Hiroko Yakushimaru
Etsushi Toyokawa
CinematographyMasaki Tamura
Yoshihiro Ikeuchi
Edited byShinji Aoyama
Music byHiroyuki Nagashima
Release date
Running time
119 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

Four couples are staying at a lakeside cottage with their children. They want them to prepare intensely for a prestigious high school's entrance exam with the help of a private tutor. One night, one of the wives confesses to her husband that she has killed his mistress...

Cast

Production

In an interview with Midnight Eye, the director Shinji Aoyama said, "I wanted to talk about whether parents really understand their kids and vice-versa. That's really the most basic thing the film is about."[1] In an interview with The Japan Times, he stated that it was a story about ordinary people, saying "At first they don't understand anything -- then they find out little by little. There's no professional detective. Everyone is an amateur. It's an all-amateur mystery."[2]

Reception

Mark Shilling of The Japan Times gave the film 3.5 stars out of 5. He felt that the film was "less a commercial whodunit with a gorgeous corpse than a dark, multilayered psycho-drama, whose subjects include the ills of the Japanese educational system and the moral limits of parental love." However, he also noted that it was "more mainstream" than Shinji Aoyama's other films. He concluded by saying, "the film does pose a timely question. In a winner-take-all society, how can one compete successfully and stay human? The answer may be staring us in the face, albeit from the bottom of a lake."[3] Russell Edwards of Variety said, "[Koji] Yakusho delivers yet another credible performance. Other thesps are solid and tech credits are excellent."[4]

References

  1. Rucka, Nicholas (24 October 2005). "Midnight Eye interview: Shinji Aoyama". Midnight Eye.
  2. Schlling, Mark (19 January 2005). "Not a whodunit but a whydunit". The Japan Times.
  3. Schlling, Mark (19 January 2005). "The school of hard knocks". The Japan Times.
  4. Edwards, Russell (1 December 2004). "Variety Reviews - Lakeside Murder Case - Film Reviews". Variety.
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